Peptide-specific recognition of human cytomegalovirus strains controls adaptive natural killer cells.
Quirin HammerTimo RückertEva Maria BorstJosefine DunstAndré HaubnerPawel DurekFrederik HeinrichGilles GasparoniMarina BabicAdriana TomicGabriella PietraMikalai NienenIgor Wolfgang BlauJörg HofmannIl-Kang NaImmo PrinzChristian KoeneckePhilipp HemmatiNina BabelRenate ArnoldJörn WalterKevin ThurleyMir-Farzin MashreghiMartin MesserleChiara RomagnaniPublished in: Nature immunology (2018)
Natural killer (NK) cells are innate lymphocytes that lack antigen-specific rearranged receptors, a hallmark of adaptive lymphocytes. In some people infected with human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), an NK cell subset expressing the activating receptor NKG2C undergoes clonal-like expansion that partially resembles anti-viral adaptive responses. However, the viral ligand that drives the activation and differentiation of adaptive NKG2C+ NK cells has remained unclear. Here we found that adaptive NKG2C+ NK cells differentially recognized distinct HCMV strains encoding variable UL40 peptides that, in combination with pro-inflammatory signals, controlled the population expansion and differentiation of adaptive NKG2C+ NK cells. Thus, we propose that polymorphic HCMV peptides contribute to shaping of the heterogeneity of adaptive NKG2C+ NK cell populations among HCMV-seropositive people.